This book includes a biography of Roy T. Williams and James B. Chapman. "From the time of the merging General Assembly at Pilot Point in 1908, until the late 1940's, both Roy T. Williams and James B. Chapman left their eternal imprint on the Church of the Nazarene."

Spengler saw himself as the prophet of potential for the German people. As the old world of bourgeois Europe burned beneath the fires of hatred, war, and blockade, Spengler foresaw a renewal that held the promise of potential. Spengler argued that history was the chronicle of the rise and fall of the great cultures of human history.

The Federal Theatre Project (FTP), a sub-program of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), created in 1935, included large and small cities all over the United States. In 1936, from January 8 to October 15, the little-known Kansas City unit employed thirty-one workers, six women and twenty-five men, of whom twenty-seven were on relief. Positions included two supervisory, twenty professional and technical, four skilled, five intermediate, and two unskilled. Four workers were returned to private employment.